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📄 fpu_emu.h

📁 早期freebsd实现
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/* * Copyright (c) 1992, 1993 *	The Regents of the University of California.  All rights reserved. * * This software was developed by the Computer Systems Engineering group * at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory under DARPA contract BG 91-66 and * contributed to Berkeley. * * All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software * must display the following acknowledgement: *	This product includes software developed by the University of *	California, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory. * * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions * are met: * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright *    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright *    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the *    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. * 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software *    must display the following acknowledgement: *	This product includes software developed by the University of *	California, Berkeley and its contributors. * 4. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors *    may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software *    without specific prior written permission. * * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND * ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE * IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE * ARE DISCLAIMED.  IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE * FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL * DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS * OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) * HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT * LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY * OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF * SUCH DAMAGE. * *	@(#)fpu_emu.h	8.1 (Berkeley) 6/11/93 * * from: $Header: fpu_emu.h,v 1.3 92/11/26 01:30:54 torek Exp $ *//* * Floating point emulator (tailored for SPARC, but structurally * machine-independent). * * Floating point numbers are carried around internally in an `expanded' * or `unpacked' form consisting of: *	- sign *	- unbiased exponent *	- mantissa (`1.' + 112-bit fraction + guard + round) *	- sticky bit * Any implied `1' bit is inserted, giving a 113-bit mantissa that is * always nonzero.  Additional low-order `guard' and `round' bits are * scrunched in, making the entire mantissa 115 bits long.  This is divided * into four 32-bit words, with `spare' bits left over in the upper part * of the top word (the high bits of fp_mant[0]).  An internal `exploded' * number is thus kept within the half-open interval [1.0,2.0) (but see * the `number classes' below).  This holds even for denormalized numbers: * when we explode an external denorm, we normalize it, introducing low-order * zero bits, so that the rest of the code always sees normalized values. * * Note that a number of our algorithms use the `spare' bits at the top. * The most demanding algorithm---the one for sqrt---depends on two such * bits, so that it can represent values up to (but not including) 8.0, * and then it needs a carry on top of that, so that we need three `spares'. * * The sticky-word is 32 bits so that we can use `OR' operators to goosh * whole words from the mantissa into it. * * All operations are done in this internal extended precision.  According * to Hennesey & Patterson, Appendix A, rounding can be repeated---that is, * it is OK to do a+b in extended precision and then round the result to * single precision---provided single, double, and extended precisions are * `far enough apart' (they always are), but we will try to avoid any such * extra work where possible. */struct fpn {	int	fp_class;		/* see below */	int	fp_sign;		/* 0 => positive, 1 => negative */	int	fp_exp;			/* exponent (unbiased) */	int	fp_sticky;		/* nonzero bits lost at right end */	u_int	fp_mant[4];		/* 115-bit mantissa */};#define	FP_NMANT	115		/* total bits in mantissa (incl g,r) */#define	FP_NG		2		/* number of low-order guard bits */#define	FP_LG		((FP_NMANT - 1) & 31)	/* log2(1.0) for fp_mant[0] */#define	FP_QUIETBIT	(1 << (FP_LG - 1))	/* Quiet bit in NaNs (0.5) */#define	FP_1		(1 << FP_LG)		/* 1.0 in fp_mant[0] */#define	FP_2		(1 << (FP_LG + 1))	/* 2.0 in fp_mant[0] *//* * Number classes.  Since zero, Inf, and NaN cannot be represented using * the above layout, we distinguish these from other numbers via a class. * In addition, to make computation easier and to follow Appendix N of * the SPARC Version 8 standard, we give each kind of NaN a separate class. */#define	FPC_SNAN	-2		/* signalling NaN (sign irrelevant) */#define	FPC_QNAN	-1		/* quiet NaN (sign irrelevant) */#define	FPC_ZERO	0		/* zero (sign matters) */#define	FPC_NUM		1		/* number (sign matters) */#define	FPC_INF		2		/* infinity (sign matters) */#define	ISNAN(fp)	((fp)->fp_class < 0)#define	ISZERO(fp)	((fp)->fp_class == 0)#define	ISINF(fp)	((fp)->fp_class == FPC_INF)/* * ORDER(x,y) `sorts' a pair of `fpn *'s so that the right operand (y) points * to the `more significant' operand for our purposes.  Appendix N says that * the result of a computation involving two numbers are: * *	If both are SNaN: operand 2, converted to Quiet *	If only one is SNaN: the SNaN operand, converted to Quiet *	If both are QNaN: operand 2 *	If only one is QNaN: the QNaN operand * * In addition, in operations with an Inf operand, the result is usually * Inf.  The class numbers are carefully arranged so that if *	(unsigned)class(op1) > (unsigned)class(op2) * then op1 is the one we want; otherwise op2 is the one we want. */#define	ORDER(x, y) { \	if ((u_int)(x)->fp_class > (u_int)(y)->fp_class) \		SWAP(x, y); \}#define	SWAP(x, y) { \	register struct fpn *swap; \	swap = (x), (x) = (y), (y) = swap; \}/* * Emulator state. */struct fpemu {	struct	fpstate *fe_fpstate;	/* registers, etc */	int	fe_fsr;			/* fsr copy (modified during op) */	int	fe_cx;			/* exceptions */	struct	fpn fe_f1;		/* operand 1 */	struct	fpn fe_f2;		/* operand 2, if required */	struct	fpn fe_f3;		/* available storage for result */};/* * Arithmetic functions. * Each of these may modify its inputs (f1,f2) and/or the temporary. * Each returns a pointer to the result and/or sets exceptions. */struct	fpn *fpu_add(struct fpemu *);#define	fpu_sub(fe) ((fe)->fe_f2.fp_sign ^= 1, fpu_add(fe))struct	fpn *fpu_mul(struct fpemu *);struct	fpn *fpu_div(struct fpemu *);struct	fpn *fpu_sqrt(struct fpemu *);/* * Other functions. *//* Perform a compare instruction (with or without unordered exception). */void	fpu_compare(struct fpemu *, int);/* Build a new Quiet NaN (sign=0, frac=all 1's). */struct	fpn *fpu_newnan(struct fpemu *);/* * Shift a number right some number of bits, taking care of round/sticky. * Note that the result is probably not a well-formed number (it will lack * the normal 1-bit mant[0]&FP_1). */int	fpu_shr(struct fpn *, int);/* Conversion to and from internal format -- note asymmetry. */int	fpu_itofpn(struct fpn *, u_int);int	fpu_stofpn(struct fpn *, u_int);int	fpu_dtofpn(struct fpn *, u_int, u_int);int	fpu_xtofpn(struct fpn *, u_int, u_int, u_int, u_int);u_int	fpu_fpntoi(struct fpemu *, struct fpn *);u_int	fpu_fpntos(struct fpemu *, struct fpn *);u_int	fpu_fpntod(struct fpemu *, struct fpn *);u_int	fpu_fpntox(struct fpemu *, struct fpn *);void	fpu_explode(struct fpemu *, struct fpn *, int, int);void	fpu_implode(struct fpemu *, struct fpn *, int, u_int *);

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